Infection Experts at Healthcare Facilities Say that Wearing and Laundering Scrubs out of the Facility Presents Risks, but is Often Allowed


At more than half of the healthcare facilities polled in a recent survey by TRSA, workers are allowed to wear scrubs home, and wear them into work, yet infection preventionists at these facilities overwhelmingly say that these practices present a risk to the public and to patients.

TRSA conducted the survey in November 2017 among 1,400 infection prevention experts at hospitals and healthcare facilities. The key findings present a disparity between actual practices, the measures necessary to contain the risk of infection:

  • At your facility, are employees allowed to clean scrubs at home?
    Yes: 54 percent
  • At your facility, are employees allowed to wear scrubs into the hospital prior to beginning work?
    Yes:  60 percent
  • Do you believe that wearing scrubs into the hospital facility from home presents an infection or contamination risk to patients?
    Yes:  79 percent
  • Do you believe that wearing scrubs home from the hospital presents an infection or contamination risk from the hospital to those outside/general public?
    Yes, 86 percent

 Further, while nearly three-fourths of those surveyed have a policy in place regarding laundering scrubs, those policies varied by job function; and more than one quarter had no policy in place at all.

“The survey addresses perceptions and policies regarding the likelihood that even non-surgical scrubs can present a risk of infection when worn into and out of the healthcare environment,” said TRSA CEO Joseph Ricci. “These facilities should be professionally laundering all scrubs at facilities that have been properly certified in order to reduce infection. The survey also indicates that the people become uncomfortable seeing healthcare workers in scrubs in public. For that reason alone, there should at least be consistent policies in place.”

The research follows up TRSA’s 2015 surveys of consumers and industry customers that indicated an overwhelming segment of both the public and healthcare decision makers agree that lab coats, scrubs, gowns and other garments laundered by linen and uniform services are cleaner and more hygienic:

  • 82% of healthcare facility decision makers feel rented lab coats, gowns, scrubs and uniforms are more hygienic
  • 83% of consumers say a professional launderer provides a cleaner lab coat vs. workers cleaning those coats themselves
  • 68% of consumers are concerned when seeing medical professionals wearing scrubs outside of a medical facility

    The survey was completed by more than 100 experts in infection prevention at facilities nationwide.

TRSA (www.trsa.org) represents the $18-billion+ linen, uniform and facility services industry which employs 200,000+ people at 1,500+ facilities in North America by advocating for fair regulatory and legislative policy and promoting the environmental benefits of reusable textiles. 

 

 

 

 

 

 



January 12, 2018


Topic Area: Press Release


Recent Posts

Designing Healthcare Facilities for Pediatric and Geriatric Populations

Understanding the nuanced needs of both age groups is essential to creating supportive multi-generational environments.


Kaiser Permanente Announces New Hospital Tower at Sunnyside Medical Center

It plans to open this new facility on the campus in 2029.


Building Disaster Resilience Through Collaboration

The ability to respond quickly and recover effectively depends on the strength of an organization’s external bonds.


Amae Health Expands to New York City

This expansion brings its integrated care model to serve individuals with complex mental health conditions.


Hospital for Special Surgery Opens Two New Facilities in New Jersey

The two facilities are a full-service outpatient center and a surgery center.


 
 


FREE Newsletter Signup Form

News & Updates | Webcast Alerts
Building Technologies | & More!

 
 
 


All fields are required. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.